This company has several products, InFocus being my current interest, I had been waiting on Focus Magic to wake up tot he Intel Mac, but it's not happening... Then I ran across this link I'd tucked away a long time ago... Looks interesting, plus several other gadgets...

I'd want to compare it to the editors I already have for sharpening/contrast before buying yet another program. Or I could just learn how to use my camera better ;-) Spent a ton of money on gear this winter that I haven't been able to put to good use yet. I'm thinking the last thing I need now is a program to salvage my crap shots instead of working on not taking them to begin with.

Have to wonder if some of these new editors are dumbed-down or declassified law enforcement tools. Cool if they are.

I tried to watch the tutorial video but found the narrator's accent impossible to follow. It seems that if they're trying to pitch the product to an English speaking audience, the narrator should be a native English speaker.

I'm with Twitty on trying to eliminate mistakes during picture taking that would require this sort of corrective action in post processing.

BTW, whatever happened to that software introduced some time back that allowed variable focus in any part of an image - also in PP. I can't remember what it was called; someone posted it here once. With that one could shift the focus from a foreground object to one in the background, or concentrate on any area, while losing the rest in bokeh.

So it's not perfect, what I saw in the live demo of Focus Magic made a lasting impression, I have some early digitals I took in 2001 with a now little Nikon 880, some indoor, low light images I'd like to recover... And, occasionally some iPhone snaps that would be nice recoveries, stuff happens, we get rushed, etc... Nice to maybe have a safety net...

Hmm, I didn't even notice an accent, but maybe more used to travels.. And maybe my interest was piqued more..

We all try for perfection up front, situations, timing, errors, being human, we don't always hit the mark, I do some tuneups in Photoshop, CS6,but I also see it's limits.

Where I really would like to play is old historical images, our local Library's archives have many, many photos, either originally poorly focused in the early 18-1900s, or recent scans where the operator blew it... So a kick to fix, recover, restore, maybe even read old signs helping to pin the time, location...

Yes, remember the multi-focus imaging, special camera maybe or a software flip.. The Detailer from the Topaz folks plays with picking focal pints, too as do some others, but more about blurring the non-subject, I do that with the blu tool in PS if needed... Like HDR a bit of a trick I think... After the first few HDRs I'm done with 'em... One board on FB there's a group hooked on composites, another on HDR, too far from reality for my tastes...

Use Photoshop or PS Elements and sharpen away. There are many settings, third party actions you can D/L for free and get similar or better results.

Oh, I've played, tweaked, fiddled, nudged, and am able to improve some, but not to my satisfaction... Some are deadly, the information has to be in there, but I can't quite get there... So I'm looking for options...